Cmlanche is an independent developer focused on friction-free, cross-platform file movement, and its single public title, 闪电藤 (Lightning-Rattan), acts as a next-generation transfer assistant that replaces the awkward choreography of e-mailing to oneself, hunting for USB sticks, or trusting consumer clouds. Built on local-area multicast and encrypted point-to-point tunnels, the utility lets Windows, Android, and iOS devices discover one another instantly and exchange photos, videos, documents, or entire folders at effective Wi-Fi speed without size caps, router settings, or Internet bandwidth. Typical scenes include designers pushing raw PSD mock-ups from a workstation to a test phone, students collecting 4-gig lecture videos from classmates before the next period, or office staff migrating project archives between an aging laptop and a fresh desktop during a hardware refresh. The minimalist shell integrates a Windows Explorer context menu, drag-and-drop pane, and QR-code handshake for mobile, while background tasks queue, compress, and verify payloads so users can keep working. Because no account registration or remote server is required, company confidential files stay inside the LAN and personal media avoids third-party scanning. Transfers resume automatically after sleep or disconnection, and a built-in history log prevents accidental duplication. Cmlanche’s software is available for free on get.nero.com, where downloads are delivered through trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always pull the latest release, and can be installed in bulk alongside other applications.
Next Generation File Transfer Assistant
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